Jesse Eisinger and Chris Arnold report that Freddie Mac has placed a huge bet that homeowners in its loans won’t be able to refinance their mortgages. Around the same time the bulk of the bets were being placed, the company made it harder for homeowners to refinance their mortgages, something even the Federal Reserve criticized as “difficult to justify.”

That raises, yet again, the conflicts at the heart of the public-(formerly) private hybrids:

But the trades, uncovered for the first time in an investigation by ProPublica and NPR, give Freddie a powerful incentive to do the opposite, highlighting a conflict of interest at the heart of the company. In addition to being an instrument of government policy dedicated to making home loans more accessible, Freddie also has giant investment portfolios and could lose substantial amounts of money if too many borrowers refinance.

That’s the big social conflict. The company is supposed to make mortgages more affordable, but if everybody refinances it will lose lots of money, which means taxpayers will eat the losses.

There’s another potential conflict here too: Freddie’s traders made big bets on an outcome (less refinancing) that other Freddie executives were about to make more likely:

Freddie began increasing these bets dramatically in late 2010, the same time that the company was making it harder for homeowners to get out of such high-interest mortgages.

Freddie insists that the traders who placed the $3.4 billion in bets are separated by a Chinese wall from the folks at Freddie who decided to make refinancing less likely, but surely it’s worth asking whether the traders knew what was coming down the pike (to be sure, it appears most of the bets were placed after the new refinancing rules came about).

Now, perhaps this “bet against American homeowners,” as ProPublica calls it, is just a run-of-the-mill hedge used by Freddie to balance its risk portfolio. Freddie doesn’t help itself by refusing to comment on the issue, while Eisinger and Arnold report that the trades increased the portfolio’s risk.

But it doesn’t look good.

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